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Video games are good, actually, find scientists

Video games are good, actually, find scientists

Egami and his colleagues found that those who won the lotteries had slightly better mental well-being scores than those who were unsuccessful, though this plateaued after about 3 hours per day of total playing time.


This spider uses trapped fireflies to lure in more prey

This spider uses trapped fireflies to lure in more prey

Behavioral ecologist Daiqin Li of Hubei University in Wuhan, China, and colleagues set up cameras on spiders’ webs in nearby farmland to watch what happened to fireflies caught in them.


We are finally improving prostate cancer diagnoses – here’s how

We are finally improving prostate cancer diagnoses – here’s how

I am not the first person to be confused about prostate cancer and whether to test for it, but today these questions are of increasing importance because we are in the midst of a troubling global trend.


Your face’s hot spots may reveal how well you are aging

Your face’s hot spots may reveal how well you are aging

“We can use the thermal facial image to diagnose these diseases with fairly good accuracy of about 80 percent,” says computational biologist Jing-Dong Jackie Han of Peking University in Beijing.


Stonehenge’s mysterious Altar Stone had roots in Scotland

Stonehenge’s mysterious Altar Stone had roots in Scotland

A Scottish source for the Altar Stone adds to evidence that increasingly points to long-distance connections, including shared pottery styles and house plans, among Late Neolithic groups that inhabited the British Isles during Stonehenge’s construction phases, says archaeologist Alasdair Whittle of Cardiff University in Wales.


‘We can’t answer these questions’: Neuroscientist Kenneth Kosik on whether lab-grown brains will achieve consciousness

‘We can’t answer these questions’: Neuroscientist Kenneth Kosik on whether lab-grown brains will achieve consciousness

And then the big insight, which came from Yoshiki Sasai in Japan and Madeline Lancaster, was to take these neurons that were beginning to differentiate — cells relatively early in development — and put them in a drop of what's called Matrigel — a gel that can be either a liquid or a solid depending on the temperature.


Why the UK was so ill prepared for the covid-19 pandemic

Why the UK was so ill prepared for the covid-19 pandemic

As a result, when the covid-19 pandemic began there were no plans in place for implementing measures such as border controls, lockdowns or testing people and tracing their contacts to identify those who might be infected with the coronavirus and prevent them passing it on to others.


Jurassic Park inspires a new way to store DNA data

Jurassic Park inspires a new way to store DNA data

To test the resilience of the polymer, the researchers encapsulated strands of DNA containing the encoded Jurassic Park theme music and a human’s entire genetic instruction book in the amberlike material and then exposed it to temperatures of 55° Celsius, 65° C and 75° C at 70 percent humidity over seven days.


Anti-inflammatory drug extended the lifespan of mice by 20 per cent

Anti-inflammatory drug extended the lifespan of mice by 20 per cent

While small doses of inflammation can protect us from disease or injury, excessive amounts damage cells, which is believed to accelerate ageing.


9 miles of solid diamonds may lurk beneath Mercury’s surface, new study finds

9 miles of solid diamonds may lurk beneath Mercury’s surface, new study finds

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I really want this Apple laptop Prime Day deal: Get $300 off the latest MacBook Pro

I really want this Apple laptop Prime Day deal: Get $300 off the latest MacBook Pro

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Plants might not hold on to carbon as long as we thought

Plants might not hold on to carbon as long as we thought

That fact became a scientific silver lining to the bomb tests: The bursts of radiocarbon circulating through Earth’s system, scientists realized, were a lot like pulses of radioactive medical tracers traveling through a human body.